BORDER TURKS WANT DOOR SHUT
Sabuhi Mammadli
rs/Security-Watch/Detail/?ots591=4888CAA0-B3DB-146 1-98B9-E20E7B9C13D4&lng=en&id=99852
ISN-IN TERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND SECURITY
May 6 2009
The gates to the Black Sea in Turkey.
Plan to reopen frontier between Armenia and Turkey wins few friends in
towns and villages on Turkish side, Shabui Mammadli reports for IWPR.
Talk of the possible reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border has
left residents in nearby Turkish towns divided on whether such a
development is what they need.
Many say that even if it means certain economic benefits for them,
they are not ready to make friends with their Armenian neighbours.
Igdir is a small town in Turkey. For all its provinciality, it lies
in an area of great strategic importance for Turkey, located at
an intersection of the country’s borders with Azerbaijan, Armenia
and Iran.
Most of the local people in Igdir are Azeris who moved here from
territories in or adjacent to Nagorny Karabakh.
Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in sympathy with
Azerbaijan, following a series of defeats that the latter had suffered
in its war over Nagorny Karabakh.
There are still no diplomatic relations between the two countries due
to the still unresolved Karabakh conflict and Armenia’s demands that
Turkey recognise the following: the 1915 mass killings of Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire as a genocide; and the territorial claims of some
Armenian political parties to six provinces in Turkey’s north-east.
But the fact that the opening of the frontier is one of the 35
requirements Turkey needs to meet to be admitted to the European
Union has put pressure on Ankara to find a solution.
Armenia and Turkey, with Switzerland as mediator, have been negotiating
behind closed doors on the issue since 2002.
The unblocking of the border was the top item on the agenda in talks
between Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and United States
president Barack Obama during the latter’s recent visit to Ankara.
The issue was also discussed during the Turkish president Abdullah
Gul’s short visit to Armenia last September.
It also featured in the Turkish-Armenian talks being conducted
in Switzerland, which resulted in the recent joint declaration of
a so-called road map, leading towards hoped-for normalisation of
relations.
Signs that Turkey and Armenia might be moving toward a rapprochement
have displeased the Azerbaijan president, Ilham Aliev, however.
He showed his annoyance by refusing to attend a recent international
conference in Ankara, thus sacrificing an opportunity to meet Obama,
who attended the event among other high-ranking guests.
Despite Azerbaijan’s demarches, the Turkish-Armenian road map already
envisions reopening two checkpoints on the frontier between the
two countries.
One is located near the village of Alijan in Igdir; the other is in
the Kars village of Akyaka.
Cahid Erol, head of the Igdir department of the National Movement
Party, known in Turkey as the MHP, is worried by the momentum leading
towards reopening of the border.
He fears the recent election of a Kurdish mayor in Igdir may have
advanced an undesirable, process.
Erol recently lost the local elections to the candidate of the
Kurdish Democratic Society Party, Mehmet Gunesh, whom Erol insists is
a sympathiser with the Kurdish Workers’ Party, PKK, deemed a terrorist
organisation in Turkey.
"Now, unfortunately, they’ve appointed a member of the PKK to lead
the municipality," Erol complained.
He worries that the new Kurdish municipal chief will act on his
pledges to open the frontier with Armenia.
Soon after being elected, Gunesh told a local newspaper he would "open
the gates of Alijan", the village near one of the proposed checkpoints.
"This will boost the region’s economic development," he told the
same newspaper.
The idea of trading away Turkey’s alliance with Azerbaijan in exchange
for "development" does not appeal to Erol.
"Our respected [party] chairman, Devlet Bahceli, says, ‘We won’t back
off on Karabakh, even if Azerbaijan does,’" he retorted.
"We would be glad if Azerbaijan took a tough stance on the
Turkey-Armenia border reopening issue, and if [President] Aliev upset
the plans of Obama and Erdogan.
"Our party has made its position clear. The border will never be
opened, or they will have to step over our dead bodies first."
Opinions vary among ordinary residents of Igdir, though many seem as
hostile to the reopening of the frontier as Erol.
Nuri, an employee in the Hotel Barbarossa, in the heart of Igdir,
said such a development would stain Turkey’s reputation.
"I just can’t imagine Armenians traveling freely to Turkey," he
said. "How can it be possible?"
A local businessman, Ekrem Yesil, struck a similar line. He said
the sociology department of the University of Arzrum had recently
conducted a survey of 10,000 people, showing the overwhelming majority
against reconciliation.
"Ninety-seven percent of the respondents said they did not want the
border reopened," Yesil said.
"Most of the remaining three per cent were members of the
pro-government Justice and Development Party."
Murat Karademir, of the opposition Popular Republican Party, also
adamantly opposes a rapprochement, describing Igdir as "the door to
the Caucasus" – a door, he says, that needed to remain firmly shut
in Armenia’s face.
"For Armenians, the town represents a path to Europe via Turkey;
in a word, it’s a strategic territory," he said.
"Opening this door to Armenians now would mean a catastrophe for
Turkey, a threat to its security.
"Besides, the PKK is very active in this region; it’s not a secret
for anyone that many PKK members are trained in Armenia and the
occupied Karabakh.
"It is there that terrorists get their wounds treated. Already it’s
very difficult to [prevent them going] crossing into Armenia. Unsealing
the border would make it still easier for them to move."
Mehmet Aydin, who comes from Alijan and now lives in Igdir, said
Ankara had recently made a point of sending envoys to the village to
argue for reopening the frontier.
"They have been saying, ‘You see how Igdir has evolved from a small
village into a town after the border with Azerbaijan was opened. That’s
what will happen to Alijan, [if the border with Armenia is unsealed]’.
"Some believe in this propaganda and want [it] to be reopened, but
most don’t."
But not everyone in Igdir wants the frontier with Armenia to remain
shut forever.
Ahmet Sahin, a local activist of the Democratic Society Party,
believes many businesses in Igdir now idling because of economic
difficulties could get back on track if the border was opened.
"I’m an entrepreneur myself," he said. "The chemical goods produced
at my factory have been collecting dust in storage facilities.
"What would be wrong if I took my produce to the Armenian market?"
"The border should be opened, because there are no jobs in Turkey,"
agreed Mehmet Broi, a local teacher. "Trade has shrunk too. Armenia
is a profitable territory for us."
The governor of the area, Mehmet Karahisarli, also sounded a note of
optimism about the possible reopening of the border. "[This] would
stimulate business activity in both Igdir and the entire district,"
he told IWPR.
But Turkish nationalists continue to reiterate that they will only
tolerate seeing the frontier unsealed if Armenia meets a series
of conditions.
These start with Nagorny Karabakh.
"First of all, Armenia has to un-occupy the territories of Karabakh,"
Erol said.
"Secondly, they should get the genocide demand out of
their heads. Thirdly, they should stop asking Turkey for
compensation. Fourthly, they should give up their territorial claims
regarding Turkey. Fifthly, they should admit to the [February 1992]
massacre [of Azeris] in Khojali.
"Once the Armenians have met all these conditions, Erdogan and Gul
can even become related to [Armenian president Serzh] Sargsian for
all we care.
"Until they do, we have nothing to talk about."
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress